Tamale, May 25, GNA - Stakeholders in the livestock sector have been advised to adopt pragmatic measures to harness the full potential of the sector for development.

Alhaji Issah Salifu, Technical Committee Chairman of Community Life Improvement Programme (CLIP), who gave the advice, said there was the need for stakeholders in the livestock sector to adopt pragmatic measures to address constant conflicts between them and crop farmers.

He said that would enhance the development of the livestock sector to promote sustainable economic development.

Alhaji Salifu was speaking at a workshop in Tamale to share experiences in the implementation of the Strengthening the Resilience of Agro-pastoral System in West Africa (PARSAO) project.

The one-day workshop is aimed at scaling up efforts at improving the well-being of livestock farmers as well as industry players along the livestock value chain to ensure peaceful co-existence in the sector and was organised by CLIP in collaboration with Acting for Life, based in France, as part of its implementation of the PARSAO project in the Northern, Upper East and Upper West Regions.

Participants were drawn from various stakeholder groups including; security agencies, cattle dealers association, crop farmers and chiefs in the three regions.

The project seeks to improve the well-being of agro-pastoral communities in West Africa and promote sustainable economic development of the livestock sector throughout the sub-region through securing, servicing, and promoting trans-border livestock mobility.

Mr Lukman Yussif, Programme Manager of CLIP urged cattle herders associations and crop farmer associations to take advantage of the strategies of the PARSAO project to ensure peaceful co-existence.

Mr Yussif said there was need for stakeholder collaboration to end farmers-herders conflicts to harness the full potential of the livestock sector in the country.

The Vice President of the Republic, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, has challenged the Ministry of Food and Agriculture to implement targeted, deliberate policies to make Ghana self-sufficient in chicken production and save the nation from the huge poultry import bill.

This follows an announcement by the Minister for Food and Agriculture, DrOwusuAfriyieAkoto, that there was no maize imports this year after the implementation of policies such as the Planting for Food and Jobs which resulted in a bumper harvest.

The Vice President has therefore challenged the Ministry to replicate this success in the poultry sub-sector to ensure a drastic reduction, if not an outright cessation, of poultry imports in the next few years.

Vice President Bawumia issued the challenge when he launched the 34th National Farmers Day on Friday 3rd August, 2018 in Accra.

This year’s weeklong celebration, which would take place at Tamale in the Northern Region, is under the theme “Agriculture: Moving Ghana Beyond Aid.”

While commending the Agriculture Minister, DrOwusuAfriyieAkoto, and his team for the successes chalked under the Planting for Food and Jobs programme, including, according to the Minister, the ending of maize imports because local production had met national demand, Vice President DrBawumia urged the Ministry to replicate their success in the poultry sector.

“I want to challenge the Ministry for Food and Agriculture, and DrOwusuAfriyieAkoto, that yes, you have announced that we’ve stopped importing maize this year, so very soon, in the next couple of years, I want you to announce that we’ve also stopped importing chicken. That is the challenge that I want to give you in the next couple of years.

“We have to pursue a very deliberate policy intervention to make sure that we can grow and eat our own chicken.”

Vice President Bawumia underscored the key role agriculture would play in achieving President Nana Akufo-Addo’s vision of a Ghana Beyond Aid, emphasising that it was time to “engineer a sustainable agricultural development path that would assure both national and household food security, improved rural livelihoods and make Ghana agriculture competitive in the world market.”

In this light, government would continue and expand the implementation of ongoing agricultural programmes such as the Planting for Food and Jobs, which would see the number of direct beneficiaries rise from 200,000 in 2017 to 500,000 in 2018, DrBawumia disclosed.

“Government’s approach and strategy for the development of Ghana’s agriculture, is holistic and transcends the PFJ initiative. Equally important interventions are being rolled out in the irrigation sub-sector in pursuit of the One Village One Dam programme. Under this One Village One dam programme, which is being implemented in the three northern regions, we expect about 570 dams to be constructed by next year.

“The increase in agricultural productivity means we have to focus on processing and that is why we have the One District One Factory flagship programme and this is also on course.

“We also know that the road sector is a major area in terms of the challenges that the agricultural sector generally faces. In the 2017 budget we outlined what we call the Akufo- Addo plan for Economic Transformation which was largely focused on improving agricultural productivity. At the heart of this programme was to make sure that critical roads across the whole country were fixed so that agricultural produce could move to market. We have so many parts of the country where poor roads are a major inhibiting factor to agriculture.

“Thankfully, following the initiation of this programme we have seen, recently announced, that we are going to invest close to a billion dollars in road infrastructure starting this year, under the Sinohydro barter facility that we have arranged,” Vice President Bawumia indicated.